Is Quantum Reality in the Eye of the Beholder?

World Science Festival
3 May 202431:20

Summary

TLDR在这段视频中,我们深入探讨了量子力学的奥秘,特别是量子测量问题,这是一个核心且尚未解决的问题。视频邀请了物理学家和作家Carlo Rovelli,他提出了一种称为“关系量子力学”的理论,认为量子态并非具有固有属性,而是相对于观察者或其他系统的属性。Rovelli认为,量子力学的关键在于其离散性或量子化,这意味着物理现象并非连续的,而是以量子跳跃的形式存在。此外,他还讨论了量子纠缠,以及如何通过关系视角来解释纠缠粒子之间的即时关联。最后,Rovelli强调,尽管量子力学存在许多未解之谜,但它已经使我们能够做出人类思想史上最精确的预测,并利用这些见解构建了我们物种所取得的最复杂的技术成就。

Takeaways

  • 📊 **量子力学的核心**:量子力学的核心是概率预测,即在观察或测量之前,我们只能对现实做出概率性的预测。
  • 🌌 **量子波函数**:量子力学通过量子波函数描述世界,该函数包含了许多可能的结果,如粒子的位置或自旋状态。
  • 🤔 **量子测量问题**:量子测量问题是指从多种可能性到单一观察结果的转变过程,这一过程仍然是个谜。
  • 🌐 **量子纠缠的非局域性**:量子纠缠展示了量子力学的非局域性,即一个地点的事件可以瞬间影响到远处的另一个事件。
  • 🌈 **多世界解释**:多世界解释是量子力学的一种解释,它认为每一个可能的量子结果实际上都发生了,但每个结果都发生在自己的量子宇宙中。
  • 🔍 **量子力学的解释**:探索量子力学的不同解释,包括自发坍缩理论和多世界解释,以及Carlo Rovelli提出的理论。
  • 🧠 **量子力学与认知**:量子力学的某些解释认为,粒子的属性是相对于观察者或其他粒子的,而不是粒子自身的内在属性。
  • 📉 **量子力学的粒性**:量子力学揭示了自然界的粒性,即事物并非连续的,而是以量子的形式存在,例如光子。
  • ⚖️ **关系量子力学**:关系量子力学是一种观点,它认为量子属性是相对于其他系统的,且每次系统间的相互作用都是一种测量。
  • ⛓ **量子纠缠与空间-时间**:量子纠缠可能是维持空间-时间结构的关键因素,这与弦理论和循环量子引力理论中的某些概念相呼应。
  • ⏳ **时间与理解**:对于量子力学的完全理解需要时间,科学的进步往往伴随着混乱和不断的理论辩论。

Q & A

  • 量子力学的核心思想是什么?

    -量子力学的核心思想是,我们对现实世界所能做的最好预测是概率性的,直到进行适当的观察、测量或相互作用。世界由量子波函数描述,它包含了许多可能的结果,只有通过观察或测量,现实才会被引导到一个确定的结果,这一过程称为量子测量问题。

  • 量子纠缠如何展示现实的非局部性?

    -量子纠缠展示了现实的非局部性,即一个地方发生的事情可以瞬间影响远处的另一个事情。这种非局部性不仅可以通过空间,还可以通过时间来传递。

  • 自发坍缩理论和多世界解释是什么?

    -自发坍缩理论是量子测量问题的一种解决方案,它提出量子系统在没有观察者的情况下也会自发地坍缩到一个特定的状态。而多世界解释则认为每一个可能的量子结果实际上都发生了,但每个结果都发生在自己的量子宇宙中。

  • Carlo Rovelli 提出了哪种量子测量问题的新解释?

    -Carlo Rovelli 提出了一种称为关系量子力学的新解释,他认为量子波函数不是描述实际粒子本身,而是描述我们计算粒子将出现在哪里的方式。他还强调了量子力学的离散性或量子化特性,即事物实际上是不连续的,存在跳跃。

  • 关系量子力学是如何看待量子测量问题的?

    -关系量子力学认为,每次两个系统相互作用时,它们都在测量彼此。波函数只是告诉我们一个系统将如何影响另一个系统的概率分布。实际的测量结果或相互作用并不显示粒子的属性,而是显示粒子与测量设备之间的相对属性。

  • 量子力学中的“量子”一词意味着什么?

    -在量子力学中,“量子”一词意味着离散性或量子化,即事物实际上是不连续的,它们以跳跃的形式存在。例如,光由光子组成,光子是光的小束,是能量的离散包。

  • 量子力学中的测量问题通常是如何被探讨的?

    -量子力学中的测量问题通常被探讨为一个哲学问题,即如何理解量子系统在没有观察者的情况下的不确定性,以及当观察或测量发生时,这种不确定性如何转变为确定性。

  • Carlo Rovelli 如何解释量子纠缠现象?

    -Carlo Rovelli 认为,量子纠缠现象不应该通过给粒子赋予绝对属性来解释,而应该看作是粒子之间的相对关系。他认为,当我们测量一个粒子时,我们实际上是在测量它与其他粒子的关系,而不是粒子本身的固有属性。

  • 量子力学与量子引力理论之间有何联系?

    -量子力学与量子引力理论之间的联系在于,量子力学提供了对自然界基本离散性的理解,而量子引力理论试图将这种理解应用于引力场,从而解释空间时间的本质。量子引力理论认为,空间时间本身也是由量子化的“量子空间”组成的。

  • 为什么量子力学的某些方面仍然难以完全理解?

    -量子力学的某些方面仍然难以完全理解,因为它们涉及到自然界的基本规律,这些规律与我们日常经验中的直观理解相悖。例如,量子纠缠现象中的非局部性,以及量子态的超位置和不确定性原理,都是当前物理学研究的前沿问题。

  • 量子力学的预测精度如何?

    -量子力学能够做出人类思想和探索史上最精确和准确的预测。尽管存在一些深层次的问题尚未解决,但量子力学已经被用于构建我们物种所创造的最复杂的技术。

Outlines

00:00

😀 量子力学基础与量子测量问题

在本段中,我们被介绍到量子力学的基本概念,包括量子力学的核心思想:在适当的观察、测量或互动之前,我们所能做的最好的事情是做出概率性的预测。量子力学描述的世界由量子波函数组成,它包含了许多可能的结果。然而,从充满可能性的世界过渡到我们只能观察和体验单一结果的现实,这个过程是神秘的,被称为量子测量问题。此外,还探讨了量子纠缠带来的非局域性质,即一个地点的行为可以即时影响远处的另一个地点,这种非局域性不仅贯穿空间,也贯穿时间。

05:01

🤔 量子测量问题的多种解释

在第二段中,讨论了量子测量问题的多种可能解决方案,包括自发坍缩理论和量子力学的多世界解释。多世界解释认为每一个可能的量子结果实际上都发生了,但每个结果都发生在自己的量子宇宙中。这个想法最早由休·埃弗雷特在1957年的博士论文中提出,尽管它是一个有争议的理论,但仍然是量子现实运作方式的主要竞争者。

10:01

🧐 量子力学的探索与新理论

第三段中,继续探讨量子力学和从量子可能性的迷雾到我们所经历的确定世界的神秘过渡。提到了物理学家和作家Carlo Rovelli开发的自己的理论,解释了这一现象。Carlo Rovelli是法国马赛大学理论物理中心量子引力小组的主任,也是量子引力环路方法的共同创始人,他的书籍普及了科学知识。

15:03

📊 关系量子力学与量子态的波函数

在第四段中,讨论了波函数的不同解释,以及如何将量子力学视为一种概率计算。提出了关系量子力学的概念,即所有的相互作用本质上都是一种测量,波函数描述了一个系统如何影响另一个系统的概率分布。强调了量子力学的离散性或量子化,即事物实际上是不连续的,例如光由光子组成,而电子在原子中的轨道是离散的。

20:06

🔗 量子纠缠与空间时间的结构

第五段深入探讨了量子纠缠,以及它如何与空间时间的结构相关联。提到了量子纠缠如何在弦理论中作为维持空间时间结构的成分,以及在量子引力理论中,空间时间的量子结构如何通过量子纠缠的数学模型得到体现。强调了量子力学中的粒性或量子化是理解量子力学核心的关键。

25:07

🕰️ 时间与科学发展

在最后一段中,讨论了科学理解的发展需要时间,包括量子力学在内的理论都需要经过长时间的思考、辩论和实验来逐渐形成共识。提到了量子力学尽管存在许多未解之谜,但它已经能够做出人类思想史上最精确和准确的预测,并且这些理论已经被用于开发我们物种有史以来最复杂的技术。

30:09

📚 科学节的闭幕

最后,由Brian Greene代表世界科学节致闭幕词,结束了关于量子现实的系列对话。

Mindmap

Keywords

💡量子力学

量子力学是研究微观粒子物理行为的科学理论,其核心思想是现实世界可以通过概率预测而非确定性预测来描述。在视频中,量子力学被用来解释量子态的波函数以及量子测量问题,是整个讨论的基础。

💡量子测量问题

量子测量问题涉及到量子系统在测量过程中如何从多种可能性中选择一个特定结果的问题。视频中提到,尽管量子力学可以预测测量结果的概率,但具体哪一个结果会发生仍然是一个谜。

💡量子纠缠

量子纠缠是量子力学中的一个非经典现象,其中两个或多个粒子以一种方式相互关联,以至于一个粒子的量子状态不能独立于其他粒子的状态来描述。视频中讨论了量子纠缠的非局域性质,即一个粒子的状态可以即时影响到远处的另一个粒子。

💡多世界解释

多世界解释是量子力学的一种解释,它提出每一种可能的量子结果实际上都发生了,但每个结果都发生在自己的独立宇宙中。视频中提到,尽管这个想法有争议,但它是量子现实如何运作的领先竞争者之一。

💡量子退相干

量子退相干是量子系统失去量子相干性的过程,即系统从一个量子叠加态转变为经典概率混合态的过程。虽然视频中没有直接提到量子退相干,但这是解决量子测量问题的一个提议机制。

💡量子引力

量子引力是试图将量子力学与广义相对论结合起来的理论。视频中提到量子引力的研究可能有助于更好地理解量子力学,并可能对理解时空的量子性质有所启发。

💡关系量子力学

关系量子力学是一种量子力学的解释,它认为量子系统中的属性是相对的,而不是绝对的。视频中提到,这种观点可能有助于解决量子力学中的一些悖论,如薛定谔的猫实验。

💡量子空间

量子空间是指在量子引力理论中,时空被量子化,形成离散的“量子泡沫”结构。视频中提到,量子空间的概念是理解量子引力和时空量子性质的关键。

💡普朗克尺度

普朗克尺度是量子引力效应变得显著的尺度,通常被认为是时空的最小单位。视频中提到,普朗克尺度是量子引力理论中的一个重要概念,它与量子空间的概念紧密相关。

💡量子态

量子态是量子系统中粒子的状态,可以用波函数来描述。视频中讨论了量子态的多重可能性以及观察或测量如何导致这些可能性中的一个成为现实。

💡量子概率

量子概率描述了量子系统中事件发生的可能性,这是量子力学的一个基本特征。视频中强调了量子力学本质上是概率性的,即使在决定论的框架下,量子事件的结果也是不确定的。

Highlights

量子力学的核心思想是我们在现实中所能做的最好预测是概率性的,直到进行适当的观察、测量或相互作用。

量子纠缠展示了现实具有非局域性质,即一个地方的行为可以瞬间影响远处的另一个量子系统。

量子测量问题,即从多种可能性的世界到只观察和体验到一个结果的过渡是如何发生的,这仍然是一个谜。

自发坍缩理论和多世界解释是解决量子测量问题的两个主要提议。

多世界解释认为每一个可能的量子结果实际上都发生了,但每个结果都发生在自己的量子宇宙中。

Carlo Rovelli 提出了自己的理论,探讨了从量子可能性的模糊到我们所经历的明确世界的神秘过渡。

Rovelli 认为量子测量问题是一个关键且开放的问题,我们仍在探索如何更好地理解它。

Rovelli 探讨了量子态的波函数是否是宇宙的真实物质,或者它只是我们计算粒子出现位置的方法。

量子力学本质上是概率性的,即使在确定性理论中,也无法确定某些量子事件的结果。

量子力学的另一个核心概念是离散性,即我们认为连续的事物实际上是不连续的。

关系量子力学提出,每次两个系统相互作用时,它们都在测量彼此,这是定义上的测量。

量子力学中的波函数只是告诉我们一个系统将如何影响另一个系统的概率分布。

量子力学的解释不应该产生矛盾,即使不同的观察者与同一对象相互作用,他们也不会发现任何矛盾。

Rovelli 提出,量子力学中的属性总是相对于其他对象的,对象仅在相互作用时才具有属性。

量子纠缠的现象在关系量子力学中被解释为粒子之间的相对关系,而不是粒子自身的绝对属性。

Rovelli 认为量子力学的理解将有助于我们更好地理解量子引力,尽管两者是独立的问题。

量子引力理论,如环量子引力理论,提出了空间时间的量子化结构,这与量子力学中的离散性概念相呼应。

量子力学的预测非常精确,尽管我们对其完全理解仍有挑战,但它已经促成了人类历史上最复杂的技术发展。

Transcripts

00:01

[Music]

00:10

welcome to the third in our series of

00:12

quantum reality conversations in case

00:15

you missed the first two feel free to

00:17

check them out but also feel free to

00:19

stay here as I'll now give you a brief

00:21

summary of where we have gotten so far

00:23

all right in our first conversation with

00:26

philosopher Elise Crow we discussed the

00:30

basics of quantum mechanics namely that

00:33

the theory has at its core the idea that

00:36

the best you can ever do in our reality

00:39

is make probabilistic predictions before

00:43

an appropriate observation or

00:45

measurement or interaction the world is

00:47

described by a Quantum wave function

00:50

that contains within it an unfamiliar

00:54

mixture embracing many possible outcomes

00:57

like particle here and here

01:00

you go left and you go right and only

01:04

through observation or measurement or

01:07

interaction is the reality we have

01:09

access to coaxed into a single definite

01:13

outcome but how that transition from a

01:17

world chock full of many possibilities

01:19

to one in which only one outcome is

01:22

observed and experienced how that

01:24

transition actually happens that remains

01:27

mysterious and is called the the quantum

01:30

measurement problem okay we also

01:33

explored how through quantum

01:36

entanglement reality has what we call a

01:39

nonlocal quality that is what you do

01:42

here can have an instantaneous Quantum

01:45

impact on something way over there and

01:48

such non-locality we found can thread

01:51

not just through

01:53

space but also through time all right in

01:56

our second conversation with physicist

01:59

and author Sean Carol we explored a

02:01

number of proposed resolutions to the

02:04

quantum measurement problem most notably

02:07

spontaneous collapse theories as well as

02:11

the many worlds interpretation of

02:13

quantum mechanics in which every

02:15

possible Quantum outcome actually

02:18

happens but each takes place in its own

02:21

Quantum Universe it's not a particularly

02:24

new idea being introduced way back in

02:26

Hugh Everett's doctoral dissertation in

02:29

19 57 but it remains a leading if

02:32

controversial Contender for how Quantum

02:35

reality actually

02:37

operates in this third

02:40

conversation with physicist and author

02:42

ker relli we are going to continue our

02:45

exploration of quantum mechanics and

02:48

this mysterious transition from a haze

02:50

of quantum possibilities to something

02:53

like the definite world we each

02:55

experience because relli himself has

02:58

developed his own Theory for how this

03:01

may come about all right let's jump

03:05

in Carla relli is the director of the

03:09

quantum gravity group at the center for

03:11

theoretical physics at X Marse

03:13

University in France he is a co-founder

03:15

of the loop approach to quantum gravity

03:18

and an author of several books

03:19

popularizing science please welcome

03:22

Carlo

03:23

[Applause]

03:26

relli so thanks thanks so much for

03:29

joining us really appreciate it it's a

03:32

really pleasure so I think you've heard

03:34

you know some of the discussions about

03:36

quantum mechanics the quantum

03:37

measurement problem where do you come

03:40

down is is the Quantum measurement

03:42

problem something that's vital to

03:44

understand in your view do you think you

03:46

have a solution to it where do you come

03:48

down on

03:49

it I actually agree with much what I've

03:52

heard from from Eliz and from Sean um I

03:56

do think that it's a it's a crucial open

04:00

uh problem and that we should or some of

04:03

us should uh should work on it uh I

04:07

think that we're still confused after a

04:09

century as you're saying and uh that uh

04:13

uh we do have some ideas of how to think

04:15

about

04:16

that uh in the way you were talking with

04:20

with Sean I think I agree uh there there

04:22

are viable ideas the question is which

04:25

one is going to be fruitful and useful

04:28

and take us ahead

04:30

um in in in understanding the world and

04:33

there is a discussion going on which has

04:35

evolved through the years and is still

04:38

evolving there are new ideas coming out

04:40

I am hopeful that at some point it will

04:43

converge and so you heard that sha is a

04:46

great fan of the many worlds approach

04:49

does that resonate with you or do you

04:51

look at that and you're like you know

04:53

much as he says you know grw isn't right

04:56

hidden variables is not right do you

04:57

look at many worlds and have a similar

04:59

reaction or is that something that

05:00

you're in favor of as a viable approach

05:03

I am exploring a different direction uh

05:06

which is a polite way of saying I don't

05:08

like that but it's very

05:11

nice yeah but uh but it's important I I

05:14

I don't think the many world it's wrong

05:18

uh I think it's a it's a possible way of

05:21

looking at the world uh I think there

05:23

are other possible ways of looking at

05:25

the world and I think we should we

05:27

should work through that yeah uh at the

05:29

very beginning started by saying uh the

05:33

first choice that we have is how to

05:35

think about the wave function yeah

05:37

that's uh and one option is to say okay

05:41

Shing W function of the quantum State

05:44

that's a real thing okay so if I stop

05:46

and can I just jump in just so people

05:47

have a visual image in mind that was

05:49

like that Blue Wave I'm sure you all

05:51

know we that encapsulates say for a

05:53

given electron the various probabilities

05:56

of say being at various locations you

05:58

call it probability wave or wave fun

05:59

function go from there yes that's right

06:01

so one one possibility is to say this

06:03

blue moving thing is the actual stuff of

06:05

the universe that's what going on um

06:09

there is an

06:10

alternative which uh I find it more

06:13

appealing for a number of reasons which

06:15

is to take the opposite perspective

06:18

namely that not the thing okay the thing

06:20

is a

06:21

particle the the actual particle and uh

06:26

uh that think there is just a way we

06:27

have to compute where the particles

06:30

going to show up

06:31

next uh In classical mechanics before

06:35

quantum mechanics there is a very

06:36

similar thing there's a very similar

06:39

techniques of using a wave all over to

06:41

compute where the particle is going to

06:43

go next it's called the um Hamilton jaob

06:47

and you have something in fact the

06:49

classical limit of the Shing function is

06:51

the Hamilton jacobe so one possibility

06:53

to to sort of try to get an intuition

06:55

about quantum mechanics is to think well

06:58

that just calculations our way of

07:00

thinking uh what's going to happen next

07:03

and since as you have been all

07:07

emphasizing a lot uh the first great

07:10

discovery of quantum mechanics is that

07:12

it's

07:14

probabilistic even if you believe in

07:17

underline deterministic Theory uh you

07:21

like anybody else you're not going to

07:22

say whether the spin will go up and down

07:24

right so it's intrinsically

07:26

probabilistic as a limitation of what is

07:28

going on yeah

07:30

then uh it means that what we can do is

07:32

a probability calculation and that's way

07:35

think is a probability calculation

07:37

that's what Max Bourne clearly um got

07:40

Noel prize for understanding that but

07:42

the probability calculation of course it

07:43

jumps right um if I don't know you're

07:46

saying simply because you know more I

07:49

didn't know enough I mean I I I don't

07:51

know what's it whether tomorrow I have

07:52

probability that the weather comes out

07:54

it's one of them and then my knowledge

07:55

jumps when when when tomorrow happens

07:58

yes when tomorrow happens or even you

08:00

know if I don't know who won a certain

08:02

game and just because it had already

08:04

happened yeah and I don't know it when I

08:06

know it my my knowledge jumps but it's

08:08

only your knowledge that jumps right

08:10

there are other people who perhaps were

08:12

at the game they already have that

08:14

knowledge so you're describing a

08:16

potential view of the world where

08:18

different observers would be in very

08:21

different levels of quantum let me let

08:23

me get there in two step in two steps um

08:26

so let me backtrack one second uh

08:29

because there's one thing which is

08:31

rarely said about quantum mechanics

08:33

which to me seems the core of the theory

08:35

which is granularity discreteness

08:38

quantum quanta yeah um in the discussion

08:41

about the meaning of quantum mechanics

08:43

we we tend to forget that and I think

08:45

this is this is wrong Quantum mechanic

08:47

came out as a description that things we

08:51

thought were continuous are actually not

08:54

continuous jumps are gra for instance uh

08:58

lights is made by gets to me as photons

09:01

individual photons if I little little

09:03

bundles of light that are bundles of

09:05

little little if I have a screen lights

09:07

got here if I look sufficiently

09:09

carefully just one dot here one dot here

09:12

one dot here one dot here or I don't

09:15

know atoms have discrete orbits right

09:17

and the the electron jumps from one to

09:19

the other and so on and so forth there

09:22

all this discreteness basis of quro

09:25

mechanics which means that I it tells to

09:30

me that if you want to think about

09:31

Quantum mechanic we don't have to add

09:32

things there is less so the electron is

09:35

here the electron is there this is this

09:37

is simp to me the indication so now let

09:39

me come to your question

09:42

yes one way you pose the question is

09:44

what is a measurement okay and that's I

09:47

think the right question the right you

09:49

asked to to Le you asked

09:52

Sean the way I think could be

09:55

useful think about quantum mechanics

09:57

which call relational quantum mechanics

09:59

is to try to answer this question by

10:01

saying everything is a measurement every

10:04

time two any two systems interact

10:06

they're measuring one another by

10:08

definition interaction is a me regard of

10:12

who's doing it what doing it a measure

10:14

so the screen the the particle touch it

10:16

that's a measurement but also an atom

10:19

here and the photon bonds it that's a

10:20

measurement okay and uh so uh the the

10:26

the the the wave function is just

10:27

telling us what is the way one system is

10:30

going to affect another system what's a

10:32

probability distribution of the way it's

10:35

going to affect it now this works at one

10:38

condition and that's a hard point and

10:41

that's I think what quantum mechanics is

10:43

deeply telling us um the condition being

10:46

that the actual result of the

10:48

measurement the r of interaction doesn't

10:52

display a property of say the particle

10:55

but discls a a relative property of the

10:57

particle who spting the screen

11:00

that's

11:01

contextuality now so just so I can

11:03

understand if I'm measuring like our

11:05

spin a half particle that we had before

11:07

and you see it up and I see it up you're

11:08

saying it's not that the particle is up

11:11

that's right it's that I and the

11:12

particle stand in a particular

11:14

relationship which is what we would

11:17

normally call the particle up but it's

11:19

not a property of it it's a property of

11:20

us both that's correct that's correct

11:23

which means that every time you say the

11:24

particle up which is fine what you

11:27

really should say the particle is up

11:28

respect

11:29

exactly and if you do that I believe

11:32

things go in order so the So-Cal

11:34

paradoxes of quantum mechanics go in

11:37

order the cat uh which interacts with

11:40

the quantum staff in the Box the shingle

11:42

cat it's either Alive or Dead with

11:46

respect to himself and do you have a cat

11:49

yeah that's right so with respect to the

11:52

cat the cat is just alive or dead

11:55

because the quantum object did this or

11:57

that but with with respect to me who are

12:00

outside the box and looking at that

12:03

careful the cat is neither dead nor

12:06

alive because with respect to me I uh

12:10

neither of these two are are are

12:12

realized so whatever I see next I

12:15

shouldn't assume that we SP to me one of

12:17

the two

12:18

happens just want make sure and it's

12:20

clear in your approach obviously it must

12:22

be but that if two different observers

12:25

are are interacting with the same object

12:28

they'll never find any kind of

12:31

contradiction you know if if the spin up

12:33

is not a property of the particle itself

12:36

you might wonder that you know person a

12:39

stands in the spin up relationship but

12:41

person B might stand in the spin down

12:43

relationship that's exactly the what has

12:46

been discussed I mean this idea of

12:47

relational quantum mechanics came out in

12:49

the '90s yeah and it slowly grew um sort

12:53

of number of people interested grew

12:55

slowly now there's a lot of paper coming

12:56

out and for you started it this was a

12:59

your idea is that yeah that's that

13:01

started off with paper of mine in the

13:03

'90s but then was developed first by

13:06

philosophers number of including

13:08

important philosophers uh Bas van fren

13:11

for instance wrote the paper on it and

13:13

and others now is is getting more in the

13:16

foundation of physics um attention um

13:19

and the first part of the discussion was

13:20

always do does this create contradiction

13:24

yeah there was a lot of debate consider

13:26

this case this case this case it doesn't

13:28

that that's the point there is a

13:30

coherence in quantum mechanics itself so

13:32

it doesn't create contradiction so the

13:34

idea here is that instead of adding uh

13:38

you know manyu world or adding hidden

13:42

variables or adding a a a g g gwr um

13:49

extra collapse and other uh

13:52

takeway uh the the the properties of any

13:56

object are always relative to some

14:00

else and object have properties only

14:03

when they interact now in some sense is

14:06

there a many worlds like quality to this

14:09

descrip it's not so different from many

14:12

worlds in a sense because if the

14:14

particle isn't spin up on its own and

14:17

it's a relationship then the other

14:20

possibilities in some sense are still

14:21

there still are still there yes in fact

14:23

it's still there

14:25

um the idea that properties are

14:28

relational it's sort of all over physics

14:30

if if you think the great

14:32

um the great step in going into into

14:36

Newtonian physics in the Renaissance

14:38

with Galileo Kepler and and so on was to

14:41

answer this question uh what is the

14:43

velocity of an object right uh is this

14:46

moving no it's not okay with respect to

14:50

us with respect to us yeah but it's

14:51

moving with respect to the sun okay

14:54

so the velocity of an object is not a

14:58

property of the object it's a property

15:00

of the object and something else it's

15:03

it's a relational property and in a

15:05

sense the relation to Quantum Mechanics

15:07

is making this very general not just

15:11

velocity uh but all the properties of an

15:14

object have to be thoughted uh uh uh

15:18

relationally with respect to something

15:19

else now when you say all presumably not

15:21

really all like the mass of a particle

15:24

presumably is not in that category

15:26

contingent conent properties the one

15:27

that change

15:29

face Bas so and so in in this approach

15:31

how does this illuminate say

15:33

entanglement you know so I mean I asked

15:35

an unfair question saying you know you

15:37

got these two distant particles you

15:39

measure one you find it up the other one

15:41

is down I said how does that happen and

15:44

of course we don't really have a story

15:46

to tell that's really convincing in the

15:49

usual approach do you have a story to

15:50

tell in this relational approach that

15:53

sheds more light on it yes it is a story

15:55

um which is uh doesn't take way the

16:00

strangeness of the phenomenal phenomenal

16:01

is strange and it remains strange uh it

16:04

sort of stor that shifted into the

16:06

strangeness of quantum mechanics itself

16:08

the story is the following um if you

16:10

imagine that you measure something here

16:13

and you measure something there you're

16:16

cheating because who is seeing here and

16:20

there at the same time nobody uh to

16:24

compare that they have seen the same

16:25

thing you have to wait until they

16:28

communicate to one another and once they

16:30

communicate to one another say the

16:32

information is is is sent um then you

16:35

can compare the so now let's see let's

16:39

see what is the world with respect to

16:41

the the the the final Observer that get

16:44

the information there's no nonn locality

16:46

anymore because all the information is

16:49

uh is so but when I when I unravel that

16:53

story wouldn't I still need to explain

16:55

why there's this correlation that

16:57

whenever this one up that one's down

16:59

whenever this one's down that one's up

17:01

which would be surprising if they're

17:03

both just 5050 up and down and not

17:05

somehow talking to each other because

17:08

you are oh you're get saying I'm I'm

17:11

assigning the property to the particles

17:12

still Yes okay exactly exactly exactly

17:15

exactly so the the the the idea here is

17:19

that think that the mistake is always to

17:22

assign absolute properties to particle

17:24

instead of relative to something else

17:27

and so are are you able to push this

17:30

approach to say um uh relativistic

17:35

quantum mechanics I mean is this

17:37

something yeah yeah it's sort of in fact

17:40

it's uh I got to there through in a long

17:45

way through quantum gravity because uh

17:47

because that's my job sure to write it

17:50

try to write a Quantum three of gravity

17:52

even if I think the problem of quantum

17:54

mechanics is separate by the problem of

17:57

quantum gravity uh and nevertheless and

17:59

I very much agree with sha in that I

18:02

think that once we understand better

18:03

quantum mechanics this should help us to

18:07

understand better quantum gravity and I

18:09

do agree with with Sean a lot that um

18:13

there is something deep to understand

18:15

about the the quantum structure of space

18:18

time

18:20

uh by somehow a clear idea about quantum

18:24

mechanics and let me step back a moment

18:28

uh I started by saying granularity

18:32

discreetness see

18:34

uh quantum mechanics has a constant H

18:38

bar yes okay unless we understand that

18:41

constant uh we don't understand quantum

18:43

mechanics so interpretation Quant

18:45

mechanics you tell me what this constant

18:46

is H bar right this is a it's a number

18:49

six comma 6.31 whatever I like the

18:52

number one in the correct units but yes

18:54

you one in the correct unit it's like

18:56

the speed of light right but the speed

18:58

of light you know it is is the the

19:00

fastest thing which I can go in some

19:02

proper sense and uh and uh and that

19:05

number it's just the size of the

19:07

granularity it tell us how big are the

19:10

the Quant okay that's that's why is the

19:12

core story of qu of of of quantum

19:16

mechanics now when you apply quantum

19:19

mechanics to gravitational field to

19:21

gravity as you were saying we shown

19:23

before uh gity is different in the sense

19:28

that it's actually space time itself

19:30

that that that that moves so like the

19:33

light is uh if you look in this small

19:36

it's

19:37

photons space time if you look into this

19:39

small should be Quantum space and that H

19:43

bar should say how bigger this Quantum

19:45

space together with Neutron constant and

19:47

so on and one gets to the to to the

19:49

plank scale and that's a core result of

19:53

loop quantum gravity the quantum theory

19:54

of gravity in which which I'm working is

19:56

a tentative Theory you don't know if

19:57

it's right yet

19:59

so the structure of SpaceTime is all

20:02

this quanta this granular so space space

20:05

is this grain of space which are quantum

20:08

space like photons but they don't live

20:10

in space they make up space themselves

20:14

and the way they are connected to one

20:16

another it's one in relation to another

20:20

one and if we think about how we think

20:22

about space the bound SpaceTime region

20:26

has a boundary and we descri how it

20:29

affect the rest and in quantum mechanics

20:31

we take systems and we describe how the

20:35

system affect another system and the two

20:38

things should go together I believe and

20:41

so this relational way of thinking

20:43

should help us in that direction you

20:45

know we only have a few minutes left but

20:47

I can't help it following that line of

20:49

discussion a little bit further because

20:50

I think as many in our audience know you

20:54

know I work on an approach to quantum

20:56

gravity strength Theory you work one of

20:59

the of the contributor main contributors

21:01

well among many many others but you know

21:04

what we have found and again as Sean was

21:07

using it is the Royal Wii many in the

21:10

field have found that there's now

21:13

evidence that the fabric of SpaceTime in

21:16

a string theoretic approach is stitched

21:19

together by the threads of quantum

21:21

entanglement because calculations have

21:23

been done where I mean in our visuals

21:26

that we showed spin up and spin down

21:28

where connected by this sort of

21:29

invisible line of quantum entanglement

21:32

there can be regions of space that are

21:34

connected by lines of entanglement and

21:36

we mathematically can cut those lines of

21:39

quantum entanglement and the space falls

21:42

apart into little tiny pieces and then

21:45

disintegrates completely once the

21:47

entanglement is fully dissolved so from

21:50

our perspective that's given a lot of

21:53

insight I me it resonates with what

21:55

you're saying but a very concrete means

21:56

by which entanglement would be the very

22:01

ingredient that holds SpaceTime together

22:04

yeah are you finding like a Sim I mean

22:06

obviously a different language but are

22:07

you finding a similar way of thinking

22:10

about SpaceTime and loop quantum gravity

22:12

yeah yeah you know that you know we've

22:14

been working very different opposite

22:17

direction to a quantum gravity but uh

22:20

that aspect of uh String Theory found it

22:23

um very much interesting and intriguing

22:27

and uh it does resonate with something

22:29

very similar that happened in Loop quto

22:32

gravity including in the mathematics so

22:35

the structural spin networks yeah is a

22:37

structure of entanglement between little

22:39

Hill spaces here and there um and uh uh

22:44

I do believe that we have not really

22:48

clarified yet we don't have a clarity

22:50

about that but there is something

22:52

convincing in the idea that the notion

22:57

of contiguity who is ATT to whom and the

23:01

sort of

23:02

entanglement uh they're related yeah

23:06

because uh you see the the core of

23:10

modern physics after Maxwell in the last

23:13

century is locality so what is locality

23:16

locality is the idea that interactions

23:18

are local so to you don't interact with

23:21

something far away inter in some sense

23:23

dynamically interact with something

23:24

nearby but you can turn this around um

23:28

what what does it mean to be nearby it

23:30

means you can interact with it directly

23:32

okay and if you interact with you get

23:34

entangled that's exactly what the core

23:36

of uh somehow the relation

23:38

interpretation is as soon as you

23:40

interact you're entangled from from the

23:41

perspective of something right so

23:43

between entanglement interaction because

23:46

of locality and the SpaceTime contiguity

23:49

there should be a common thing and I

23:52

think that's the beautiful uh slow

23:57

understanding and r of quantum gravity

23:59

which is happening nowadays so let me

24:02

end on a question that I asked in one

24:05

way or another to both Elise and Shawn

24:08

which is you know we've been at this for

24:10

a long time we have yet to fully unravel

24:14

it at all we're making progress but what

24:17

do we lack to get to some final complete

24:21

understanding of quantum mechanics and

24:23

hopefully then be able to apply it to

24:25

issues like the quantum nature of

24:27

SpaceTime is it is it experiment is it

24:30

better mathematics do we need to use AI

24:33

systems or do we not have the brain

24:35

power what do you think it

24:37

is I think just time namely working on

24:41

it let me challenge one thing you said

24:44

at some at some point you you describe

24:46

the Vance the physics of course you were

24:48

simplyy you know by sort of we had a

24:50

clear metaphysic everything was clear

24:52

until in the old days in the old days

24:54

and then quantum mechanics experiment

24:56

come out and then in the dark of that's

24:58

not true right I mean when Maxwell wrote

25:00

his equation everybody was confused what

25:02

this is about including Maxwell himself

25:04

and they very messy equations very messy

25:07

equation was incomprehensible and he

25:09

thought that it was really D matter

25:11

pushing and pulling and rotating them it

25:14

took Einstein to understand that's

25:15

really not the case and so on I mean

25:18

there was a confusion all over right so

25:21

being in a state of confusion is not

25:24

really uh a characteristic of our time

25:27

and when Copernicus I'm even going even

25:30

before did the soal copernica revolution

25:34

is not everybody jumped up and said oh

25:36

yeah right we're moving and we have a

25:38

new world picture and that's our world

25:39

picture it took a century yeah to go to

25:42

Kepler and and and and Galileo

25:44

convincing everybody that actually makes

25:46

sense we're moving and everybody was

25:48

orent confusing exactly because of what

25:50

we were saying before we're not moving

25:52

how can we moving so you have to

25:54

completely rethink what moving means

25:58

okay then of course comes Newton and

26:01

everything it's it's uh and so on so I

26:03

think that takes time between Copernicus

26:06

and Newton finally clarify is a century

26:09

and a half yeah quantum mechanics is

26:11

only a century we we are what does it

26:13

take it takes I believe people thinking

26:17

about that writing paper debating

26:20

getting angry to one another no you're

26:21

wrong no you're wrong that's fine that's

26:23

how science work it developing theories

26:27

and then slowly at some point uh I

26:30

believe uh uh some uh perspective will

26:35

become more fruitful and will come to

26:39

agree on a view um I I think that my

26:44

grand grand children I don't have

26:46

children I mean think that in two two or

26:47

three generations if we don't kill one

26:50

another with the atomic bombs which is

26:52

if survive uh people will say of course

26:55

the shoting ctis is like obvious isn't

26:57

it like we say of course in syy people

27:00

are upside down right it's obvious yeah

27:02

yeah no and it's an amazing thing even

27:04

with quantum mechanics today graduate

27:07

students speak in terms that's right

27:10

that are so intuitive that's you and I

27:13

yeah like a little bit you know and go a

27:15

generation before and it would have been

27:17

even more difficult to acclimate to this

27:19

new way of thinking about things which

27:21

becomes fluid later on so in short it's

27:24

like three cheers for confusion because

27:26

that's the natural place for us and uh

27:30

let's not forget that quantum mechanics

27:33

are 100 years old but quantum mechanics

27:34

has unbelievable predictions that nobody

27:38

believed like entanglement large

27:40

distances where many people were

27:42

thinking oh yeah but that's cannot be

27:44

true yeah and the solid convincing uh

27:49

experimental support that quantum

27:51

mechanics actually right is not so old

27:53

after all I the last Nobel price with

27:56

Zing company yeah BAS basically it's a

28:00

prize for people who are saying look

28:03

Quantum mechanic is right yeah and so if

28:07

I place your prediction in more personal

28:10

terms when my grandkids are adults

28:14

perhaps we'll have this solution in hand

28:17

which would be certainly a wonderful

28:18

outcome if get there I hope so we

28:20

probably won't be there but probably not

28:22

join me in in thanking Carlo

28:28

thank

28:30

you so perhaps as Carla roelli suggests

28:34

Quantum weirdness is bound up in our

28:37

mistaking relative qualities of objects

28:40

or particles qualities that are in

28:43

relation to another object or particle

28:45

or Observer mistaking those qualities

28:48

for intrinsic qualities like mass and

28:52

charge it is a promising approach that

28:55

no doubt will continue to be developed

28:58

all right that is the third in our

29:01

series of conversations on Quantum

29:03

reality if you've not seen part one with

29:04

Elise croll or part two with Sean Carol

29:07

I encourage you to do so as those

29:08

conversations covered a lot of ground on

29:11

the basics of quantum theory the quantum

29:13

measurement problem and the many worlds

29:16

interpretation of quantum mechanics let

29:19

me leave you with one final thought in

29:22

these conversations we have focused on

29:25

the frontier of quantum mechanics the

29:28

the aspects of the theory that we are

29:31

still struggling to fully understand but

29:34

bear in mind that for all the things

29:36

we've yet to fully sort out we can use

29:39

quantum mechanics to make the most

29:42

precise and accurate predictions in the

29:45

history of human thought and exploration

29:48

while also being able to leverage those

29:50

insights into building the most

29:52

sophisticated technology that our

29:55

species has ever achieved so while there

29:59

are deep questions that remain we should

30:02

be rightly proud of all that we have

30:06

achieved all right thanks for joining us

30:08

and until next time from the world

30:10

Science Festival I am Brian Green

30:15

[Music]